The old myth of it being a must to have a CW crank to keep from bounding the case main web
this stand?
I just torn down a 69 non CW x 88mm, engle 110 cam, ported heads with 40 webers,
stock weight flywheel and a berg heavy pulley along with about 80,000 miles on the motor and
the case still looked good. If it wasn't burning oil I would have kept running it.
was I lucky
Were you lucky (?) YES!
1.You do not state if it is slip in barrels. If thats the case, I would bet my days pay, that the engine has NOT made 80K miles. More like 8K miles. If it is machine in barrels, they can easily take that kind of lifespan.
2. If it really has covered 80K miles in the same set up, the valve guides are very worn, which also can be used to determine the real mileage.
3. Non CW cranked engines in that set up can live, and for quite a while. The key word is balance, lightweight and as JS wrote, not too many rpms.
I have seen engines in that configuration (or regular 1600´s) that lived from 10 to 68000 miles. The one I saw with 68K on the odometer was used as a daily driver by a norweigian girl, who´s parents lived around Lofoten. So it took some long trips every once in a while. Anyway, the engine was so beat up by then, that the only thing we used from it was the flywheel and cool tin. Buit she had a large size right foot too
When I sell my 100 hp 1600 type 1, built out of basically stock parts, I instruct the customer of exactly that: In daily commute do not rev it higher than 5000 rpm. and keep the last 700 rpms up to the limiter to "special occasions" where you need to state an example or pass a truck
I expect these engines to have a lifespan at about 40-45000 miles before they need to be taken apart and inspected.
T